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Daily Inspiration Quote by Benjamin Disraeli

"What we anticipate seldom occurs: but what we least expect generally happens"

About this Quote

Disraeli’s line lands like a cool slap to the face of Victorian self-assurance: you can plan, predict, and posture, but reality keeps a private calendar. As a statesman who rose by maneuver, spectacle, and tactical reinvention, Disraeli knew that political life punishes the tidy forecast. The sentence isn’t just a shrug at fate; it’s an argument about power. Anticipation is what institutions do to stay in control: committees, party whips, policy papers, the whole machinery built to make tomorrow legible. Disraeli punctures that machinery with a neat reversal: the future doesn’t reward the anxious planner, it rewards the flexible operator.

The rhetorical trick is its symmetry. “Seldom” versus “generally” exaggerates without sounding hysterical; it’s wry, not mystical. The subtext is a warning against complacency disguised as confidence. People (and governments) don’t simply misread events; they misread themselves, overestimating their ability to steer outcomes. “What we least expect” isn’t random lightning. It’s the consequences we refuse to model because they’re inconvenient: the backlash, the coalition that forms offstage, the crisis born from yesterday’s clever compromise.

Context matters: 19th-century Britain was a churn of reform bills, imperial shocks, industrial volatility, and shifting class power. In that environment, inevitability was a political performance, not a condition. Disraeli’s intent is pragmatic cynicism: expect surprise, because surprise is the system. The line flatters no one, but it quietly instructs leaders how to survive - by treating uncertainty not as an exception, but as the default setting.

Quote Details

TopicWisdom
Source
Verified source: Henrietta Temple (Benjamin Disraeli, 1837)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
‘Yet such I suppose is life,’ murmured Ferdinand; ‘we moralise when it is too late; nor is there anything more silly than to regret. One event makes another: what we anticipate seldom occurs; what we least expected generally happens; and time can only prove which is most for our advantage. (Book II, Chapter IV ("In Which Some Light Is Thrown on the Title of This Work")). This is a primary-source occurrence in Disraeli’s novel Henrietta Temple (first published 1837). The commonly-circulated shorter form (“What we anticipate seldom occurs: but what we least expect generally happens”) is a paraphrase/abridgement of the sentence in the novel; Disraeli’s original wording here includes “least expected” (not “least expect”), uses a colon after “another,” and continues with an additional clause (“and time can only prove…”). Project Gutenberg is a later digital transcription, but it reproduces the relevant passage and locates it in Book II, Chapter IV. For page numbers, you must consult a specific scanned edition because pagination differs across printings/reprints.
Other candidates (1)
Joy of Living (Prasanna Rao Bandela, 2008) compilation95.0%
... What we anticipate seldom occurs , but what we least expect generally happens , " reminds former British Prime Mi...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Disraeli, Benjamin. (2026, February 12). What we anticipate seldom occurs: but what we least expect generally happens. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/what-we-anticipate-seldom-occurs-but-what-we-4699/

Chicago Style
Disraeli, Benjamin. "What we anticipate seldom occurs: but what we least expect generally happens." FixQuotes. February 12, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/what-we-anticipate-seldom-occurs-but-what-we-4699/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"What we anticipate seldom occurs: but what we least expect generally happens." FixQuotes, 12 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/what-we-anticipate-seldom-occurs-but-what-we-4699/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

Benjamin Disraeli

Benjamin Disraeli (December 21, 1804 - April 19, 1881) was a Statesman from United Kingdom.

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